Regarding Bush and the timing of his writings, evidently titled, "Golf: the triumph of Hope over Experience", Weeks writes;
"Under the caption "Golf: the triumph of Hope over Experience", the Club secretary, S. Dacre Bush, wrote this description of the Long Nine when it was ready for play:", and then goes on to quote Bush directly, hole by hole. There is an obvious confusion in the first sentence, because if Bush wrote it precisely when the Long Nine was ready for play, that would logically have been before the course was 18 holes. One possible explanation is that we know the 18 holes were already designed and under construction by 1897, and just not ready for the US Open of 1898. I suspect it was written around the time of the US Open around 1910, but I could be wrong.
In any case, it's fairly detailed...a few examples from Bush;
The first hole was the present 2nd. The tee was on a high ridge above and to the east of the Club house. The tee faced north, the fairway was bisected by a wide sandtrap at a distance to catch a topped second shot and the green was guarded by four-foot mounds and deep traps, approached down a sharp declivity and with rough at the back.
The second was the present 8th. This was one of the two longest holes, the fairway covering ridges which cut off the view of the green and which necessitates uphill and downhill lies. The green, three full shots from the tee in those days, pitched sharply from right to left, and when sunbaked, lightning fast. Players stroking a chip firmly from the upper edge have seen their ball gather speed, cross the 25 yards of the green and disappear into the rough. Distance 427 yards, par 5.
The third was the present 9th, minus the pond. The player, probably with a mashie, aimed at a long domino green, never wider than 15 yards, and entirely surrounded by sand traps, placed to catch hook or slice, in the deepest of which a player, bending over his ball, would disappear. Distance 130 yards: par 3. The bullrushes which gave the hole its name were death on a topped shot.
and so on...